Thursday, July 31, 2008

"Every single man knows: Walking a dog in the park is a sure babe magnet. Saudi Arabia's Islamic religious police, in their zeal to keep the sexes apart, want to make sure the technique doesn't catch on here. The solution: Ban selling dogs and cats as pets, as well as walking them in public." (thanks Nadim)

"American forces now hold about 22,000 Iraqi detainees at Camp Cropper in Baghdad and Camp Bucca, near the Kuwait-Iraq border. While the vast majority will never be charged under Iraqi law because there is not enough evidence to bring them to trial, the American military says that about a third remain security risks."

"The emerging agreement, officials said, gives Iraqis [read puppets of the American occupation] much of what they want — most notably the guarantee that there would no longer be foreign troops visible on their land — and leaves room for them to discreetly ask for an extended American presence should security deteriorate."

This is Zionism: "Israeli troops wounded three Palestinians in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday in a clash with protesters at the funeral of a 10-year-old boy killed a day earlier, Palestinian medics said."

"RIYADH: The Indonesian Embassy reported yesterday that it logged 102 reported sexual assaults of Indonesian maids in the first half of 2008. “This is in addition to 156 cases of physical torture reported to the embassy from January to June this year,” said Sukamto Javaladi, labor attaché at the Indonesian Embassy. “The Indonesian Embassy is seeing a steady upward trend in the number of reported cases of sexual assaults, while thousands of our women also suffer working inhumane hours for almost no pay with many enduring abuse by their Saudi employers.”" (thanks Fatima)

"Most of over 2 lakh Bangladeshi workers in Kuwait get monthly salary as low as Kuwaiti dinar (KD) 20-25 (equivalent to Tk 5,000-6,500) and cannot recover the amount they invest for the overseas job even in three to four years." (thanks Tanweer)

"In April Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak told U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice that Israel had removed 61 of the more than 500 roadblocks and checkpoints in the West Bank "to make life easier for the Palestinians." This followed promises made by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert at the Annapolis, Maryland, peace talks towards the end of last year, to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas that the number of roadblocks in the West Bank would be significantly reduced. However, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported in May that the number of West Bank closure obstacles had risen from 566 to 607 from September last year to the end of April this year." (thanks Toufic)

Saudi media, especially Al-Arabiya TV, are reporting the impending resignation of Olmert like one reports a death in the family. But then I again I realized why: he was prime minister when the Saudi-Israeli alliance was solidified and perfected.

"Police have arrested 55 people at a party allegedly held by homosexuals at a farm near Qatif in eastern Saudi Arabia. David Dicang, the Philippine Embassy’s labor attaché in charge of the Eastern Province, said, “I know that some Filipinos have been arrested in that area and we are trying to help them.”" Saudi Arabic media are referring to the party as "deviance party". And notice that the arrests in those cases are always directed against poor foreigners.

Sari Nuseibeh (who speaks for more Americans and Israelis than for Palestinians) is really worried that Israeli actions are leading toward a one-state-solution. He also is willing to give up the right-of-return in negotiations with Israel. Fortunately, for Palestine and Palestinians, Nuseibeh has not standing whatsoever among Palestinians, although he is in good standing at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

"At least 15 Bangladeshi workers were injured while 60 others were arrested as Kuwait police dispersed the workers protesting against low wages, bad working conditions and other exploitations by cleaning companies in Kuwait on Monday. Kuwait's Cabinet Minister Faisal Al-Hajji, meanwhile, said the workers had agreed to return to work after the government said it would ensure their rights and warned that "anyone participating in riots would be deported", the Kuwait Times reported yesterday." (thanks Tanweer)

"As an Apache, he has long hair that he has been growing in his Native cultural tradition that "violates" this school's dress code rules. The kicker though is that the school board is willing to make exceptions on religious or other "proven" moral grounds, but doesn't think that being Native American cuts it." (thanks Bert)

"Only six percent of probes into offences allegedly committed by Israeli soldiers against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank yield indictments, an Israeli rights group said on Wednesday." (thanks Olivia)

Look at this headline in the Guardian: "Palestinian boy, 10, dies as Israeli troops fire on demonstration." It makes it look as if the killing of the boy is unrelated to Israeli firing on demonstrators. (thanks electronic Ali)

"Even by the squeamish standards of the American media, the photographic record of the war in Iraq is remarkably antiseptic. The paradigmatic images are not of combat or of bodies in the street but, rather, the digital snapshots taken by US soldiers of Iraqi prisoners being humiliated at Abu Ghraib - that is, a consequence of war rather than the thing itself." (thanks Fayyazuddin)

"If Israel releases Hamas members of the Palestinian parliament as part of a deal for the return of kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit, PA President Mahmoud Abbas will dismantle the Palestinian Authority, Abbas warned Israel last week." (thanks Marion)

"The SFO dropped its inquiry into the £43bn deal with BAE Systems over fears it would threaten national security. Ministers said that the Saudi government had threatened to withdraw cooperation on security matters." (thanks Mark)

"President Bush and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki are poised to conclude a bilateral "memorandum of understanding" that would authorize U.S. troops to continue military operations in Iraq. There is only one problem — the memo won't be binding U.S. law."

The New York Times feigns care about the Palestinians. You see the New York Times is sensitive to Palestinian victims when their victimizers are not Israeli. "Al Haq, a Palestinian rights group based in the West Bank city of Ramallah, released a report on Monday on what it called a “horrifying and blatantly illegal trend” of arbitrary arrests, torture and other cruel or degrading treatment against individuals in the West Bank and Gaza by “various Palestinian security or military agencies and personnel.” Al Haq said the maltreatment had resulted in three deaths in Gaza and one in the West Bank since June 2007. Human Rights Watch is to release a report on Wednesday documenting abuses by Hamas against Fatah in Gaza, and by Fatah against Hamas in the West Bank, in the past year."

"As best I can piece it together, what actually seems to have happened was that the escalation troops began by disarming the Sunni Arabs in Baghdad. Once these Sunnis were left helpless, the Shiite militias came in at night and ethnically cleansed them. Shaab district near Adhamiya had been a mixed neighborhood. It ended up with almost no Sunnis. Baghdad in the course of 2007 went from 65 percent Shiite to at least 75 percent Shiite and maybe more. My thesis would be that the United States inadvertently allowed the chasing of hundreds of thousands of Sunni Arabs out of Baghdad (and many of them had to go all the way to Syria for refuge). Rates of violence declined once the ethnic cleansing was far advanced, just because there were fewer mixed neighborhoods."

"But that demand was foreshadowed by an episode in June 2006 in which al-Maliki circulated a draft policy calling for negotiation of just such a withdrawal timetable and the George W. Bush administration had to intervene to force the prime minister to drop it."

The fruits of the Bush Doctrine: Dahlan rules. "One of several former detainees interviewed in Nablus and Jenin, he described what appeared to be a pattern in which Hamas sympathisers are often only released on production by their families of money or guns. The alleged abuse by PA forces appears to be aimed at convincing western donor governments, as well as Israel, that the authority is "clamping down on terror"."

The Palestinian people deserve better--much better--than those two LOUSY Palestinian organizations: "Two human rights groups on Monday decried widespread torture of political opponents by bitter Palestinian rivals Hamas and Fatah. Interviews with three victims and a doctor backed the reports of abuse." (thanks Sellam)

"More and more civilians are losing their lives in Afghanistan, as NATO troops have upped their fight against Taliban insurgents. According to information obtained by SPIEGEL, at least 97 civilians have been killed in seven Afghan provinces this year alone during anti-terror operations." (thanks Nabeel)

"Kuwaiti Police yesterday arrested some Bangladeshi workers after they went on a rampage while protesting low wages, poor working conditions and other exploitations over the last couple of days. According to the Arab Times, about 2,000 Bangladeshi workers, employed by Al-Jawhara Company for Stevedoring and Cleaning in Hassawi in Kuwait, destroyed six vehicles and injured five camp officials on Sunday." (thanks Tanweer)

" "They do not understand that Israel means nothing to us. We consider it an enemy country as do all the Lebanese," he said. After 1982, very few Jews went to Israel, and those who did go didn't stay long. They felt deeply Lebanese," said Efraim." The article then said: "It's not easy being Jewish in Beirut where the synagogue is crumbling, the rabbis have left, the community is dwindling and where Jews are commonly branded "Israelis"." I agree that it is not easy being Jewish in Beirut, just as it is not easy being Arab in Tel Aviv. Also, the Lebanese state officially (from Ottoman times) refers to Jews of Lebanon as "Israelites" not in reference to Israel--o well-informed correspondent--but from the biblical term that was borrowed in Ottoman law long before the creation of the state of Israel atop Palestine. (thanks Olivia)

"One Brit received a three-month suspended sentence and was ordered to pay QR5,000. A second British national was also handed a three-month suspended sentence and a QR3,000 fine. And the Syrian, a Muslim, was sentenced to 40 lashes if he is found medically fit to withstand the punishment." (thanks Omar)

Religious fanatics for Israel. You have to read this Kuwaiti columnist: House of Sabah finally openly expresses its support for Israeli killings. (the writer is also, of course, a fanatical nut who calls on the government to combat Sufism). (thanks Fadi)

"Michael Rubin writes, after news of Kurdish journalists being arrested and harassed by the KDP: “Success in Iraqi Kurdistan could have been one of Bush’s greatest legacies. Unfortunately, it appears just one instance of how his administration has squandered its chances.” This has been one of the major myths of the Iraq War. The vision of a liberal Iraqi Kurdistan, free of the backwardness and religious fanaticism of Arab Iraq, was one many Western journalists loved to cover. Westerners could travel with relative ease in Iraqi Kurdistan, where the people are broadly pro-American, and where pervasive military and militia activity discourages “Arab” terrorism. This is a land where women are routinely burned alive, non-Kurds have their movement heavily watched and regulated, often by gangs of militiamen, Christian churches are violated and the identity of their patrons forcibly reconstructed from Semitic ones to “Kurdish” ones, and where political actors suffocate dissent by intimidation and force." (thanks Nouri)

"The unemployment rate in the Gaza Strip now stands at 45 percent, higher than anywhere else in the world, according to a report released recently by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration."

How much groveling (toward Israel) can advocates and propagandists for the Syrian regime do in one week? The answer is: plenty. And please: tell the Syrian regime not to speak on behalf of all Arabs when they promise peace and normalization with Israel. And remember that Sadat had promised them the same.

"Palestinian citizens of Israel – officially referred to by the state as deracinated "Arabs" because it cannot bring itself to acknowledge the fact that they are Palestinian – face institutionalised forms of discrimination far worse than those once encountered by African Americans. For example, while Jewish Israelis who marry non-citizens (or residents of Jewish settlements in the occupied territories) are entitled to have their spouses come live with them, Israeli law explicitly denies that right to Palestinian citizens who marry Palestinians from the occupied territories. Palestinian citizens are also denied various other privileges, including access to state lands, reserved exclusively for Jews." (thanks Kev)

It is without exaggeration that I say that you can't trust the New York Times on the Middle East, even if it is about non-political aspects of the region. Look at this obituary of Egyptian filmmaker, Yusuf Chahine. The longish piece does not do justice to the man, and even distorts his personality and political positions. I met Chahine once in Washington, DC and spent hours with him. He would rail for house about US imperialism and Zionism. This art critic for the Times (who has the political sensitivity of Meir Kahane) transformed Chahine into some lame Egyptian liberal, a la Mahfouz, to whom he audaciously compared him. Chahine was a socialist enthusiast, and categorically opposed any normalization with Israel. He even developed nostalgia for Nasser after the rise of the Sadat dictatorship. Compare this obituary in the Guardian (which took a break from its obsessive coverage of the plight of white farmers in southern Africa): "When I met him in Cairo in 2002 he had just hit the headlines of the newspapers after the police had used tear gas to disperse a peaceful demonstration against Israel: Chahine, suffering from heart problems, was carried from the scene by students." I have this question for the New York Times and like-minded Zionist fanatics: do they think that by ignoring the reality of popular and intellectual hostility to Israel and Zionism that they can wish it to go away just like that? Fat chance.

"It must be the smallest Israeli settlement in the occupied Palestinian territories: just half a house. But Palestinian officials and Israeli human rights groups are concerned that it represents the first stage of a plan to eradicate the historical neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem, cutting off one of the main routes by which Palestinians reach the Old City and its holy sites." (thanks Enrique)

Sunday, July 27, 2008

"The U.S. military admitted Sunday that American soldiers killed civilians after opening fire on a car last month on the heavily secured Baghdad airport road. The statement — which called the man and two women killed "law abiding citizens of Iraq" — reversed earlier military claims that they were suspected militants who shot at a parked American convoy."

Walid Jumblat's interview on New TV today was quite a show. He basically moved from channeling Elliott Abrams to channeling...George Habash. For some reason, I kept thinking of the various Zionist fanatics/neo-conservative Americans who have been saluting and singing the praise of one of the most unprincipled politicians in the Middle East. George Will once said that George H.W. Bush was one of the most unprincipled people in U.S. politics, and Jumblat is the one in Lebanon. How will they now adjust to the re-adjustments of their friend Walid Jumblat? What will Dennis Ross say now? All those people who showered praise on him in his last WINEP appearance, how will they react now? I never have seen somebody utter the word Palestine more than Jumblat this evening. I kid you not. It was even comical. Hell, he talked about Palestine more than...Angry Arab. It was like: Hi...Palestine. Good...Palestine...Evening.I..Palestine...am...Palestine..glad...Palestine...to...Palestine...be...Palestine..with...Palestine....He said that his father, and even Rafiq Hariri died for..Palestine--he did not explain the last one. He said that March 14th got too sequestered in an isolationist position and that they have ignored the "constant principles" of his struggle: Palestine and Arabism and resistance. He went on about the importance of Palestine and Arabism. He substantially softened his rhetoric against Syria, so much so that I am certain that MEMRI will not send a special bulletin of this particular interview. He was nice about his friend "Condy" and he clearly implied that his "friend", former U.S. ambassador in Lebanon, Geoffrey Feltman, privately expressed to him views critical of the Bush administration stance toward Palestine. He did not forget to send salutations to "the Arab knight"--his ritualistic reference to the Saudi King. He said that the Bush administration was way too late in addressing Palestine, and at one point blamed the Lebanese crisis (over the issue of airport security and Hizbullah's communication network) in May to a press leak by..."Imperialism and Zionism." I am not making this up. He used those words. He spoke about the need to re-educate his own party on Palestine and Arabism. He criticized his allies in March 14th, and accused them of racism against Palestinians and Syrians. He said that he only visited the U.S. to ask for the overthrow of the Syrian regime at first, but later only to ask for their help regarding the international hariri tribunal. He said that he is disillusioned with the U.S. administration and its policies and mocked the dispatch of the Cole destroyer to the waters off Lebanon. It was quite a show of political opportunism. He defended his embrace of Samir Al-Quntar, and said that some of his March 14 allies have blamed him for his recent rhetoric about resistance, and his implicit blame of the Hariri camp for the clashes in Tripoli. He now wants "normal relations" with the Syrian regime. He also mocked Now Lebanon website, and clearly implied that they represent pro-U.S. Shi`ites. He also speak about oppression in the Arab world as if all Arab countries are free and democratic except Syria. He admitted that his party is a sectarian Druze party, but named four non-Druzes in his party as if that proves anything. Equally repulsive, will be the Hizbullah's coming political flirtation with him in response.

"Under the far harsher regime of Afghanistan, death for apostasy is still on the statute book, despite the country’s American-backed “liberation” from the tyranny of the Taliban. The Western world realised this when Abdul Rahman, an Afghan who had lived in Germany, was sentenced to die after police found him with a Bible. After pressure from Western governments, he was allowed to go to Italy. What especially startled Westerners was the fact that Afghanistan’s parliament, a product of the democracy for which NATO soldiers are dying, tried to bar Mr Rahman’s exit, and that street protests called for his execution."

"During Mr. McCain’s last two tours of the Middle East — conducted without the invasive scrutiny of network anchors — the only news he generated was his confusion of Sunni with Shia and his embarrassing stroll through a “safe” Baghdad market with helicopter cover. He should thank his stars that few TV viewers saw that he was even less at home when walking through a chaotic Pennsylvania supermarket last week. He inveighed against the price of milk while reading from a note card and felt the pain of a shopper planted by the local Republican Party."

From my local newspaper:"In the July 21 Bee ("Lebanese line up to praise freed killer and symbol of resistance," Page A-6), your reporter most of the time referred to the freed Lebanese prisoner, Samir Kantar, as a "killer," thus accepting the Israeli point of view that he killed an Israeli child, rather than Kantar's claim that the child died during a shootout with Israeli commandos. Now, if your reporter was a commentator, I would not have had any problem with that, though I would still have opposed this point of view. But your reporter is supposed to be neutral and not take sides. A reporter's duty is to try to be objective. Thus, your reporter could have said "the alleged killer," or a similar phrase which would convey the fact that there are two versions of the events. I denounce this lack of objectivity. Without doubt, in the Israeli-Arab conflict, both sides have committed atrocities, and the Western media have mostly accepted the Israeli version of events as "truth," not expressing any sympathy toward the victims of Israeli aggression against Arab civilians. I remember clearly the picture of a car smashed under an invading Israeli tank, with a Lebanese family of five within it. This is not to justify acts of brutality against Israeli civilians. It is only after we accept the humanity of both sides and denounce violence committed by both sides that we can expect peace to take hold.SARKIS ELMASSIANCeres"

""Amnesty International believes all 16 to be prisoners of conscience, detained for their participation" in a "peaceful protest in the city of Alexandria on 23 July," the London-based rights group said in a statement."Amnesty International on Saturday urged the authorities in Egypt to free 16 Internet activists jailed for more than two weeks for "threatening national security."

"The Federal Aviation Administration could soon cut back the number of flights from Israel to the United States after finding Israel's aviation safety to have "severe security shortcomings," according to a report by Israeli newspaper Haaretz."

"Tali Fahima, a Jewish Israeli woman who was tried and convicted for her contacts with Zakariya Zubeidi, former Jenin chief of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, criticized Zubeidi on Thursday, saying that he had turned into the "whore of the Shin Bet security service.""

This is Zionism: "A Canadian student who took part in a protest against the security wall Israel's building in the West Bank has been arrested and faces deportation from the Jewish state." (thanks Dana)

"QUESTION: There’s a report in the Middle East that General James Jones presented a report to Secretary Rice about the security situation between Israel and the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, and it was very critical to Israel. Do you have anything about this?MR. GALLEGOS: Yeah. My understanding is that he is yet to publish a report. There are stories about drafts that have been released. The bottom line is the general has been there. He’s taken a look at the situation. He has the full support of the Secretary. We’re going to continue working through him and with him and we’ll see – ultimately see what is published.QUESTION: Does the President have a decision made on whether the full report will be published and public?MR. GALLEGOS: I don’t have any information on that (inaudible).QUESTION: Is that under discussion at the moment?MR. GALLEGOS: I’ll have to check. I don’t have anything on that.QUESTION: Does the State Department have a position on whether it should be?MR. GALLEGOS: I’ll have to check. " (thanks Enrique)

"Some Muslim preachers in the West Bank and Saudi Arabia have taken notice, saying the show is un-Islamic and urging the faithful to change channels. But all the same, the show may be planting seeds of change."

"A 13-year-old boy was maimed on 7 June by what appeared to be Israeli unexploded grenade he had found three days before in the fields near his home in Tulkarm Camp, while collecting grass for the goats." (thanks Olivia)

Is this also a maaadraaassssaaaah? "Students at extremist yeshivas in West Bank settlements have been involved in a large number of violent confrontations with security forces there recently and in throwing stones at Palestinian cars, say military sources. Senior Israel Defense Forces officers are reportedly furious over the lack of effective legal measures against rioters and because the government is taking no steps against yeshiva teachers who incite to violence." (thanks Rakia)

A new Fatwawawa by the Saudi Muftiti: he ruled that Turkish TV serials are "criminal, malignant, leading to moral dissolution, harmful, damaging, and corrupting." He adds that "It is illegal to watch or view them, for they include evil, wickedness, destruction of morals, and fight the virtues of which God knows." (thanks Saleh)

"Are you still practicing Sufism? I think the word is “studying” it, “learning” it.Isn’t it a strand of Islam, founded by Muhammad? I know people think this, because they have looked in the nearest reference book, but the thing is Sufism has always had adherents from all faiths or none.As a longtime resident of London, what do you make of the growing Islamic presence in Europe? I don’t go on and on about it, like our two knights.You mean Martin Amis? And who else? The other one who never stops going on about Islam. Christopher Hitchens. I don’t want to add any nasty poison to this brew. It’s nasty enough as it is, so let’s leave it."I just have one question about the questions by Deborah Solomon. What would happen to an American reporter's career if she/he were to ask a person about "the growing Jewish presence in country X"?

Saturday, July 26, 2008

"“I have had a very adventurous life, but not because I have an adventurous nature or yearned for a life full of adventure,” he said. “Fate just wanted it this way.” Yet while the West has lionized him, in his native Czech Republic, 19 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, he remains a source of ambivalence, if not sometimes downright resentment. “Havel gets attention in the West by saying banal, kitschy things,” said Bohumil Dolezal, a leading right-wing commentator, who once worked for Mr. Klaus."

Jeffrey Fleishman of the Los Angeles Times offers this verdict on Mubarak's dictatorship: "Even though Egypt is a democracy..." No, really I am curious now. How does this work? Countries that sign peace treaties with Israel are automatically elevated to the status of democracies?

"The report, based on data from the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, reinforces anecdotal evidence given by such people as one prominent Gaza construction employer who recently estimated that of more than 100 workers he was obliged to lay off because of a lack of materials, a majority had joined the Hamas police force or its military wing. Some diplomats have privately questioned the wisdom of a blockade which makes it easier for Hamas to recruit force members. The UN says that the burgeoning youth segment of the Palestinian labour force (15- to 24-year-olds) was "the ... most prone to increased unemployment"."

"JAN. 18, 2005 An Iraqi girl after her parents were killed by American gunfire in Tal Afar.""Zoriah Miller, the photographer who took images of marines killed in a June 26 suicide attack and posted them on his Web site, was subsequently forbidden to work in Marine Corps-controlled areas of the country. Maj. Gen. John Kelly, the Marine commander in Iraq, is now seeking to have Mr. Miller barred from all United States military facilities throughout the world. Mr. Miller has since left Iraq."

"Earlier Thursday, Palestinian security officials said that more than 20 settlers had attacked another Palestinian village in the West Bank, Burin, smashing cars and windows and cutting electricity wires." All of the attackers have been offered positions as Middle East advisers for the Obama campaign. (thanks Sellam)

"The details read horrific and would bear repetition just to bring out the essence of crudity associated with the degree of exploitation and deprivation our expatriate workers are subjected to in some fraternal countries. The Kuwaiti company in question pays them 18 dinars instead of the promised 50 a month; workers are made to work for 16hrs a day without overtime and weekly holiday; five dinars are deducted per day for absence due to illness; some have gone without leave for eight to ten years; a number of workers were not paid two months' wages -- the list is endless. To top it all, just to be able to deny their basic rights, the company officials force workers to sign contracts at variance with those they had signed before coming to Kuwait." (thanks Tanweer)

"After resigning in protest, the prosecutor, Air Force Colonel Morris Davis, also disclosed that when he suggested to William Haynes, the general counsel at the Pentagon, that a few acquittals might enhance Guantánamo's reputation for fair treatment, as had been true of the war crimes trials of the Nazis in Nuremburg, Haynes was horrified. "We can't have acquittals! We've got to have convictions!" Davis quoted the top Pentagon lawyer as saying. "If we've been holding these guys for so long, how can we explain letting them get off?"" (thanks Carlos)

"An Israeli journalist told PNN that the Yediot Achronot newspaper took 100 percent of its information from Arab news agencies. Specifically, the Israeli press took information from Al Quds Al Arabi, Asharq Al Awsat and Dar al Hayat, which are all Arab newspapers. Assafir and Al Akhbar, two Lebanese newspapers, were also used as primary sources of information."

"On Friday, the third session of the group's training camp will begin in the Catskills woodlands of upstate New York, on land belonging to a Jewish supporter of the organization. With tuition at $400, the group expects 15 participants and five instructors for the 10 days of training. Participation has doubled since the group began three years ago. Kitat Konenut New York is modeled on the rapid response teams in the West Bank settlements that are often the first to act when terrorist attacks or other emergencies take place. The group bills itself as religious-Zionist but nonpolitical." (thanks Olivia)

"At that meeting, with IDF officers and officials from the State Prosecutor's Office, Baram focused in particular on two yeshivas in the northern West Bank whose students have been party to crimes against Palestinians in the area. One, called Dorshei Yihudcha, is located in Yitzhar and headed by Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira, an associate of Rabbi Yitzhak Ginzburg, who headed the Od Yosef Chai yeshiva that was formerly located at Joseph's Tomb in Nablus. Shapira is among the rabbis who signed a manifesto in support of the suspects in a brutal attack on two Arab youths on Holocaust Remembrance Day in May. "The community's moderates are unable to exert their authority over the yeshiva boys, and there are many complaints in the area," Baram was quoted as saying. "Two yeshiva boys recently went into a nearby Palestinian village to set fire to Palestinian cars, but they were caught and beaten, and the army had to extricate them.""

"While most Israelis have been galled at the extent of the alleged corruption, no one has been surprised by the source of the funds. Politicians in Israel have long known that if they want to raise large amounts of money, for whatever reason, they'll find it in the United States. Foreign donations are banned for general elections, but Israeli leaders routinely get half or more of their campaign contributions for party primaries from overseas, and mostly from American donors. The fundraising trend is especially pronounced on Israel's political right; politicians who advocate aggressive military action against Iran and Hamas and who maintain an uncompromising stance against ceding land to the Palestinians have typically found generous support for their views in the States. Former prime minister and Likud Party leader Binyamin Netanyahu, for instance, received approximately $400,000 -- 75 percent of his donations for a 2007 primary -- from U.S. contributors, according to the Israeli comptroller's office. By contrast, Israeli donors accounted for less than 5 percent of reported contributions to Netanyahu, who hopes to return to power if Olmert falls and who has sharply criticized the current government for its willingness to cut deals with Israel's enemies."

Friday, July 25, 2008

"In 2008, an ethnically cleansed Baghdad has achieved some measure of precarious stability (though not peace) -- but only through having U.S. forces turn it into a city of concrete barriers that choke off circulation and vitality within the sprawling metropolis. An intrepid reporter for New York magazine managed to round up an Arabic translator and call Al Hamadany on his cell phone in Baghdad. This quote gives some sense of his situation: "Right now, while I am speaking to you, there are rockets going over my house! The situation is very, very bad. The infrastructure is zero. Electricity is zero. I work with all the difficulties to put food on the table for my children."" (thanks I.B.)

"It’s great to see Mr. Moufarrege’s witty embroidered paintings here, turning art history into pop culture. His “Truth About John the Baptist,” with its hulking superhero, Arabic script (it reads, “My father taught me Arabic calligraphy”) and child floating in a pool of pink glitter, looks just right today. So does Mr. Wong’s “Sweet Oblivion” (1983). It’s the most beautiful painting of the Lower East Side I know of, and it’s an image of a time and place that now exist only in art and memories."

Stop the presses. Another Lebanese "invention" of a cure for cancer. "According to Adib, however, there are ways to prevent cancer, by adopting cancer prevention tips like sticking to healthy Lebanese cuisine that may slow down the development of cancer cells. "Tabbouleh (a local salad) is made of tomatoes, olive oil, lemon, parsley and onion, all of which are known powerful antioxidants," says Adib." (thanks Arnaud)

"Police have arrested 26 Internet activists in the port of Alexandria, and 14 of them were jailed for more than two weeks for "threatening national security," a security official said on Thursday. Around 30 young Egyptians who belong to the so-called "6 April" group on social networking site Facebook, a group which earlier this year called for a day of protests at rising prices, gathered in Alexandria on Wednesday."

Al-Quds Al-`Arabis is reporting that Obama was scheduled to have lunch with Israeli occupation puppets, Abu Mazen and Salam Fayyad, but that Obama changed his mind and decided to have lunch with his Israeli friends instead although the dishes were prepared. It was a boo hoo hoo moment for Abu Mazen and Salam Fayyad.

For those who asked for a definition, this is Zionism: "On Wednesday 23 July, three Israeli settlers, one masked and wielding a stick, pursued 14 Palestinian children who were on their way to a summer camp in At-Tuwani."

I am citing this with the permission of Omar: "Colonizing Iraqi Cuisine by Omar Dewachi On April 23 , the New York Times published an article, "A Bit of Old Baghdad With a Western Twist," () in its 'Dining and Wine' section, reviewing La Kabbr, an Iraqi restaurant in New York City. Instead of drawing on an expert of Iraqi cuisine, the author of the article chose to focus on the Times Bureau Chief in Baghdad, now the editor of the world section of the Times Magazine, who had spent 4 years covering the war. The article celebrated how this restaurant in New York has become a "clubhouse for journalists and officials who have spent time in Baghdad, and for Iraqi expatriates and Iraqi-Americans." Aparisim (Byline, Bobby) Ghosh the Baghdad Bureau chief seems to speak as an authority of Iraqi cuisine when he is quoted in the article saying:"I wonder why Iraqi cuisine is not more sophisticated," he said. "It is essentially peasant food, which I happen to love because it fits my palate perfectly. But intellectually, you wonder why, with all of its influences, the food isn't more complex."Feeling somewhat disturbed by the article and its problematic Orientalist and naive representation of Iraqi cuisine, I chose to write the following short letter to the editor, fitting their word-limit requirement: To the editor,

I find your article "A Bit of Old Baghdad With a Western Twist, Dining, April 23" to be somewhat offensive, ill informed and badly researched. I am an Iraqi who grew up to the delights of the Iraqi cuisine and unlike Mr. Gosh—who had spent time in Baghdad perhaps eating in restaurants around the green zone—I had a very different experience. I completely disagree with the portrayal of Iraqi food in this article as "peasant food" and not "complex." I find such statement reminiscent of the simplistic media representation and understanding of Iraq and Iraqi society. Iraqi dishes vary from one region to the other and many are 'complex' dishes that require skill and years of experience. I recommend that both Mr. Gosh and the author read Nawal Nasrallah's cookbook, Delights from the Garden of Eden, which explores both the history and the various recipes of the Iraqi cuisine. As an Iraqi, I find it disconcerting that even our food now has to be reduced and simplified by western media reporters.Omar DewachiCambridge, Mass.I received a phone call a few days later from the New York Times Dining and Wine editors asking for permission to publish the letter. To my dismay the letter appeared in the April 30 issue completely butchered and sucked out of its life. Here is how the letter appeared:Simply Not Peasant FoodTo the Editor:Re "A Bit of Old Baghdad With a Western Twist" (April 23):I am an Iraqi who grew up to the delights of Iraqi cuisine. I disagree with the portrayal of Iraqi food in the article as "peasant food" and not "complex." Iraqi dishes vary from one region to the other and many require skill and years of experience.I recommend Nawal Nasrallah's cookbook, Delights From the Garden of Eden, which explores both the history and the various recipes of Iraqi cuisine.Omar DewachiCambridge, Mass.This is a very disturbing form of censorship and silencing of critical Iraqi voices who seemed to have lost even the ability to speak for their own food and cuisine. As simplistic representation of Iraqi society continues to predominate Western media, Iraqi cuisine seems to become now its latest victim."

"The bulldozer as a destructive and even lethal weapon was not invented by the Palestinians. They are merely imitating an Israeli "fashion" that is as old as the state, or at least as old as the occupation. Let us forget for a moment the 416 villages Israel wiped off the face of the earth in 1948 - that was before there were D9 bulldozers - and focus on a more modern fashion. In Israel's hands the bulldozer has become one of the most terrifying weapons in the territories. The only difference between the Palestinians' murderous bulldozer and the Israeli bulldozer is in color and size. As usual, ours is bigger, much bigger. There is no similarity between the small backhoe the Palestinian terrorist was driving and the fearsome D9 driven by Israel Defense Forces soldiers." (thanks Rakia)

"Eight Iraqi trade union leaders have been forcibly transferred from Basra to Baghdad, where their lives are said to be at risk for opposing a planned law in which control over oil exploration and production would be placed in foreign hands."

"There is not much new here except the revelation that there is not "an occupied population" on the Golan Heights. The author served for six years as an IDF artillery officer and was involved as an advisor with Gov. Bill Richardson's campaign for president." (thanks Dick)

"In the past five years, 2,331 U.S. firms with a total value of $772.3 billion were purchased by foreign buyers, according to data provider Capital IQ (like BusinessWeek, Capital IQ is a unit of The McGraw-Hill Companies (MHP)). In 2007, 614 U.S. firms, valued at $294.4 billion, were acquired by foreign entities, up from 226 firms valued at $49.6 billion in 2003." Of course, deals are controversial only when the buyers are Arabs. (thanks Nabeel)

It is an indication of the sad state of Arab (official) affairs that there is a Libyan-Swiss crisis because the Swiss police did what is right, in briefly arresting the spoiled brat of the Libyan dictator. In fact, I fault the Swiss authorities for releasing that abusive brat on bail. They should have kept him in custody, and even called for the extradition of his murdering father.

"It is the seventh video she will have posted since she made her online debut in March. Speaking in English, she asks people to suggest stereotypes they have heard about the Arab world so she could "break them down one by one"." Wow. How impressive. And who is better than you to break down stereotypes. Here is one for you: there is a stereotype out there that your pathetic King spends all his time playing PlayStation III, and there is another one that you really believe that you are some queen and that you are the most boring public figure that Jordan had to deal with. Oh, and you really are proud of yourself that you can speak English. Break those down for me, one by one.

"He still refuses to talk about various meetings and discussions he held in the corridors of global diplomacy. He agrees to speak about the relationships he developed with his colleagues from Oman, Morocco and Qatar."

What a cute surprise. "Admiral Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, surprised IDF Chief of Staff Lieutenant-General Gabi Ashkenazi on Thursday by honoring him with the US military's highest award." The award cited the Israeli use of cluster bombs against civilians. (thanks Olivia)

It was cute that Bush invited dissidents from Syria, Iran, and Sudan. The Syrian dude he invited is a big fan of Bush, only more right-wing than him. Bush did not invite dissidents from Libya, Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and Oman because he said all those countries have succeeded under his stewardship to achieve full blossoming democracies. Hail the Bush Doctrine NOW.

"Still, the legal process ahead is likely to be messy, because the Supreme Court has left much unsaid. It did not pronounce on the legality of the military commissions, the standard of proof required to be held in detention, the admissibility of evidence obtained under duress, and what access prisoners will have to secret information. Moreover, the ruling does not cover the roughly 21,000 prisoners held by American forces in Iraq or the 650-odd in Bagram in Afghanistan, which get far less scrutiny. Donald Rumsfeld, the former American defence secretary, famously said that Guantánamo Bay was meant to house the “worst of the worst”. Yet the majority of the 780 or so prisoners who have passed through the hands of the interrogators there have been sent back to their home countries without charge. Of the remaining 270, only 20 have had charges for war crimes filed against them. Between 60 and 80 may eventually be prosecuted. About 60 have been approved for release but for various reasons cannot go. That leaves an awkward group of perhaps 120 against whom there is insufficient evidence to prosecute but who are still considered dangerous. Some legal experts argue that a new national security court should decide whether they can be interned without trial."

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Hizbullah held a solidarity event in Beirut in tribute to...the Sudanese dictator. It is one thing to denounce the hypocrisy and dishonesty of the ICC, but it is another thing to show support for Al-Bashir. The Hizbullah speaker (the influential Political Assistant of Hasan Nasrallah) offered some really pathetic praise for Al-Bashir.

""The walls between the countries with the most and those with the least cannot stand. The walls between races and tribes, natives and immigrants, Christian and Muslim and Jew cannot stand," he said." He added the Israeli separation barrier is different because it is...cute.

Dahlan, o Dahlan. "''We want to take the Palestinian cause to the people through theater." Theater? I am sure that the French resistance against the Nazi occupation would have been most effective if it resorted to...theater. (thanks Olivia)

"Saeb Erekat, a senior aide to Mr. Abbas and a senior Palestinian negotiator, said in an interview after the meeting that Mr. Obama seemed to be committed to helping both sides achieve a peace accord and was supportive of pursuing a two-state solution." Erekat said that about Bush, and will say that about Meir Kahane provided you can gaurantee to get his name and picture in a newspaper in the West. The Palestinian people and its cause deserve so much better. So much better.

"But Obama missed the opportunity to visit Palestinian refugee camps, schools and even shopping malls to witness first-hand the devastation caused by the Israeli army and settlers, or to see how Palestinians cope under what many call "apartheid". This year alone, almost 500 Palestinians, including over 70 children, have been killed by the Israeli army - exceeding the total for 2007 and dwarfing the two-dozen Israelis killed in conflict-related violence." (thanks Electronic Ali)

"B’Tselem, the Israeli human rights organization, reports that a total of 123 Israeli minors have been killed by Palestinians since the second intifada began in 2000, compared with 951 Palestinian minors killed by Israeli security forces."

The Syrian delegation in Washington, DC deserves all the humiliation that it is receiving. After begging for an audience with AIPAC, the lousy delegation prostrated itself before the Saban Center in the capital. Their meeting with a U.S. official was canceled. I relish every humiliation that any Arab government can get. They deserve that--and more.

After careful study, and thorough examination, the Yale Divinity school has concluded that Prince Ghazi Bin Muhammad bin Talal of the Jordanian dynasty is the most popular Muslim in the world. They have decided that no Muslim can speak for all Muslims more than Prince Ghazi. Enjoy. (thanks Nabeel)

There has been a disconnect between the abilities and talents of the Palestinian people and the organizations that speak in its name. (Having said that: the reality remains: the suffering of the Palestinians have been caused first and foremost by Zionism). But I have been distressed and disgusted to what happened to the returning bodies of Palestinians and Lebanese as part of the recent prisoners' exchange. Sources tell me that the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine scrambled to take credit for a large number of the bodies, even when there was no evidence to its claim (in some cases the remains are only teeth). Members of the DFLP rushed to write "Hawatimah" on the boxes, and it is being bizarrely claimed that none of the boxes belong to fighters from Fath, which in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s provided most of the fighters--before the rise of Dahlan. So the DFLP managed to dishonestly claim that most of the boxes belong to its members when the organization did not have much of a record fighting Israel, and the one operation it managed to pull (Ma`alot) was quite lousy (although typically in those cases, the murder of the people is caused by savage and indiscriminate Israeli gunfire and bombings). And the pro-Syrian Ba`th party is also claiming some of the bodies when this organization was known for thuggery but not much more. Even the Hariri gang is taking credit for one of the bodies. Don't ask me how.

Samir Quntar was on Future TV. MEMRI typically took one sentence from a long interview to market. He again denied the Israeli version of events of what happened back in 1979, when he was 16 years old. He revealed the Maariv the day after his arrest in 1979, reported that the victims in that attack were killed by Israeli gunfire. He said that he was subjected to torture in order for him to agree to the Israeli version of events, but said that the judge did not include the charge about killing the girl in his sentencing. He said that an Israeli medical doctor participated in the cruel and savage torture to which he was subjected. He also spoke about the history of Palestinian prisoners' protests in the apartheid state of Zionism. More than 100 prisoners have been shot and killed in those protests. In 1970, Israeli occupation prison guards shot and killed a Palestinian prisoner during a major protest when the prisoners protested the Israeli policy whereby all prisoners were required to address their jailers as "O, Master." In other news, the killer of women, children, and elderly and the killer of Palestinian poet, Kamal Nasir, remains at large. And he (Ehud Barak), yesterday gave a tour of the occupied territories to Obama.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

There is no qualitative difference between the countries of the Saudi camp and the Syrian and Iranian regime in that they all agree that their priority is to stay in power, and all are willing to sell the Palestinians and their own slogans to stay in power and to please the American administration. I mean, what about that request by a semi-official Syrian delegation visiting Washington, DC to meet with officials from AIPAC? And this article here quotes a source in the DFLP that the Syrians whose bodies or remains were returned by Israel to Lebanon in the recent prisoners' exchange were in fact wanted by the the Syrian regime because they were working (fighting) with Palestinian organizations?

This is Zionism: "Two Palestinians narrowly escaped a lynching attempt in Jerusalem Tuesday evening after they were assaulted by dozens of ultra-Orthodox Jews. The two Arabs were wounded, while a Jewish resident who protected them with his body was stabbed." (thanks Rashid)

The press coverage of the White Man of the developments in Zimbabwe has been quite sickening but not surprising at all. We are treated to articles that want us to believe that Mugabe is the worst dictator out there. Yet, here he is meeting with opposition leaders and signing deals with them. Can you imagine the pro-U.S. dictators in UAE, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Libya, Morocco, Egypt, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, and other places meeting with opposition figures? I mean the president-for-life-and-death in Egypt put an opposition figure in jail for daring to run against him in a sham presidential election.

While the I.C.C. basically killed itself before it started by destroying its credibility in its total subservience to the U.S.--the country which did most to basically undermine the work of the International Criminal Court, and while the ICC can't be taken seriously as long as it will never be able to take on the country which has been committing the most war crimes since the end of the Cold War, the Sudanese dictator is one of the most repugnant religious demagogues out there. Whenever he faces a crowd, he resorts to religious chants that have no relevance whatever. I watched him on TV today leading a crowd with chants of God is Great.

Pearl of Angry Wisdom of the day: Political Opportunism kills talents. Watch out. I have lately been saying, based on my observation of a certain former leftist in Lebanon who now writes for the Hariri rag, Al-Mustaqbal, that political opportunism provides its own form of self-punishment. Political opportunism kills any talents or creativity that a person may have. For those of you who are considering careers of political opportunism remember that. Fouad Ajami was not that talented intellectually speaking, but he at least used to write nice prose--25 years ago, and most of it cliche-ridden and very repetitious and tedious at times. But look at him now: does he not sound like Israeli propagandists? He can't come up with one original thought or even expression anymore.

"Egypt has banned a book by a British journalist about Egyptian politics and society entitled Inside Egypt: The Land of the Pharaohs on the Brink of a Revolution, the author told AFP on Wednesday." (thanks John)

Nazi anti-Semitic bigots for Israel. "Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, an independent who frequently campaigns with McCain, said pastor John Hagee's support for Israel outweighed the remarks that led McCain to reject his endorsement." (thanks Olivia)

This says all. U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East (no matter whether there is a Republican or a Democrat in the White House) hinges on crooks, tyrants, thugs, and criminals. Here, Obama crowns his visit to Iraq by meeting with chief tribal thug, Ahmad Abu Risha (whose family went from support of Saddam, to support of Bin Laden, to support of U.S. occupation).

".S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama pledged staunch support for Israel on Wednesday in Jerusalem, describing the Jewish state as a miracle and holding only a low-profile meeting with Palestinian leaders." (thanks Regan)

"Palestinian officials said they didn't bring up the Jerusalem remarks in their meeting with Obama on Wednesday." Of course they did not. They can only bring up what their Israeli and U.S. master tell them to bring up.

"“What we know is American presidents all support Israel,” said Muhammad Ibrahim, 23, a university student who works part time selling watermelons on the street in the southern part of this city. “It is hopeless. This one is like the other one. They are all the same. Nothing will change. Don’t expect change.”"

For readers outside of the U.S: Sen. McCain is considered an expert on national security and foreign affairs. ""I think it's serious. . . . It's a serious situation, but there's a lot of things we need to do. We have a lot of work to do and I'm afraid it's a very hard struggle, particularly given the situation on the Iraq/Pakistan border."" (thanks Fatima)

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

I usually don't agree with literary critic, `Abduh Wazin. But here he makes an interesting point about the Orientalist trends in the writings of Arab writers in English and French. He calls it "exoticism", intended to attract Western readers.

Why peace will come to the Midde East at long last: "King Abdullah and Queen Rania al Abdullah and their entourage arrived in Aspen Sunday night. The royal family stayed in top-floor suites at the luxurious Little Nell hotel at the base of Aspen Mountain, according to a local man who was involved with some aspects of their visit. Queen Rania and some of the family’s four children were said to have gone rafting on the Roaring Fork River Monday. Prior to the visit, King Abdullah spent about a week in northern California and Oregon, where, according to the Seattle Times, he was riding his 1998 Heritage Softail Harley-Davidson motorcycle through the scenic countryside, often with local police support. Prior to that, the king was in Sun Valley..." (thanks W.A.)

Don't leave me behind. What about us the puppets of occupation? Al-Arabiya TV began its morning broadcast by airing lenghty comments--pleading, really--by Ahmad Abu Risha (successor to `Abdus-Sattar Abu Risha. He said that Obama should not mention any reference to withdrawal or timetables. Abu Risha almost said that his men would continue to fight for the American occupation provided they continue to receive $300 per month, although his men threatened to go back to supporting Al-Qa`idah a few months ago when their stipends were late in arriving. This is a war of principles and lofty ideals. Make no mistake about it.

"The rapid rise in tuberculosis cases in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union is strongly associated with the receipt of loans from the International Monetary Fund, a new study has found. Critics of the fund have suggested that its financial requirements lead governments to reduce spending on health care to qualify for loans. This, the authors say, helps explain the connection."

You can't accuse the National of Organization of Women in the U.S. (which is dominated by upper class white women) of insensitivity to religious and ethnic minorities. I mean, this year NOW decided to invite somebody representing Muslim women. They decided to invite Irshad Manji. I am not kidding.

Obama learns about the Middle East: "An Obama campaign ban on green clothing during the candidate’s visits to Israel and Jordan has created wide puzzlement among observers of the Middle East." (thanks Mouin)

There is really one non-sectarian organization in Lebanon. It is an organization formed by the families of Lebanese and Palestinian prisoners (most of them killed) held by the Syrian regime. They represent different political organizations (from the left to the right). Yesterday, the families demonstrated in Beirut to alert the media on the day of a visit by Syria's foreign minister. The goons of the Lebanese Army brutally suppressed their action. Here, comrade Khalid writes about it. (thanks Shant for the picture)

"Visible minorities charged with a crime in Canada are less likely to be convicted, but more likely to have a DNA sample taken. They're also more likely to have police warnings on their file for violence, escape risk and suicidal behaviour." (thanks Hicham)

"Senior officials in the U.S. State Department, including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, have repeatedly complained to Israel recently over relatively minor Palestinian issues that it would have ignored until a few months ago, Israeli officials say." Hanan Ashrawi: a friend of Rice. How nice. How touching. Is this like the friendship between Dahlan and Mofaz?

"According to the Wahhabi imams who wrote this textbook, it isn't enough to simply worship God or just to love other believers; it is important to hate unbelievers, too. By the same token, (b) is wrong as well: Even a man who worships God cannot be said to have "true belief" if he also loves unbelievers." (thanks Nabeel)

"Around 5,000 Bangladeshi workers went on an indefinite strike in Kuwait City yesterday protesting underpayment and irregular wages, and not getting other facilities promised by the Kuwaiti company they work for." (thanks Tanweer)

The new AlJazeera. How much AlJazeera has changed under U.S. pressure and in the wake of Saudi-Qatari reconciliation. Yesterday, I watched some part of a show on Iraq: one Arab critical of the American occupation (Raed Jarrar) was invited but his view was presented as the token Arab point of view. The rest of the guests were American officials or former American officials, the former puppet ambassador of the Iraq-under-occupation, and an "expert" from the Hudson Institute.

Victims with names. As-Safir published the names of the 167 dead bodies of the 197 dead bodies returned by Israeli occupiers in the prisoners' exchange. You will notice people from different Arab countries who died fighting for Palestine.

I like it when I see puppets of occupation displaying their conflict: "A senior Palestinian official said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown can keep the 60-million euros he promised to the Palestinian Authority when he appeared in Bethlehem Sunday. Yesterday, Sari Nusseibeh, the Palestinian Authority's representative in Jerusalem, held a packed press conference for the international media, where he said further foreign aid should be curtailed until Israel's presence in the disputed territories end. Mr. Nusseibeh said life becomes "too complacent for the Palestinians" when they accept foreign aid. The removal of foreign aid would place the burden of supporting the Palestinian entity entirely on Israel's shoulders in his opinion.He acknowledged that one of the reasons for his support of the cessation of further foreign aid to the Palestinians involved the allegations of wanton corruption, leveled against Yassir Arafat and his successor Mahmoud Abbas. While advocating an independent Palestinian state, Mr. Nusseibeh also worried about violence in Palestinian society. In answer to a question, he admitted that much of the incitement occurs during the evening telecasts of the Palestinian Broadcasting Corporation, which operates under Mr. Abbas' supervision." Notice that this report referred to Nusseibeh as "senior official" while he is neither. But maybe they meant that he was a senior puppet of occupation.

Mini-Hariri in Baghdad. Amer Mohsen wrote this for Iraq Slogger: "In recent days, a visit by Lebanese leader and businessman Sa’d al-hariri to Iraq has fueled speculation and analysis in the Arab Press, with several reports published to investigate the significance of the trip, in which Hariri - a “Sunni” leader, pro-Saudi and pro-American - met with the entire top tier of Iraqi leadership, in addition to Ayatollah Sistani - who, at some point, was depicted in the Western Press as a hermit-like character, aloof from daily politics and reticent to meet with politicians (nowadays, the high Shi’a cleric is often paid several weekly “visits” by Iraqi and foreign officials.)

In the Lebanese al-Mustaqbal daily, founded and owned by the Hariri family, Wissam Sa’adeh wrote on the alleged benefits of the Hariri visit, contemplating a meeting of minds between Shi’a and Sunni Arabs who support the “project of the state” (ostensibly, individuals like Hariri and Maliki, allied with governments like Saudi Arabia and Jordan) against those Shi’as and Sunnis furthering a project of “sedition” in the Middle East (with references made by the author towards Iran and Syria, the common target of the Hariri-owned media in Lebanon.)

In the op-ed, the author argued that recent bouts of civil strife in the Middle East (specifically in Iraq and Lebanon) were employed and furthered by radical forces using sectarianism to hamper the “project of the state.” On the other hand, he claimed, Iraq and Lebanon are witnessing a bright model of state-building that eschews radicalism and sectarian violence. The author added that the representatives of this project (such as PM Maliki and PM Siniora) are also making advances, citing the recent “successes” of the Iraqi government forces “from Mosul to Basra, passing by Anbar.” Sa’adeh ends his article by expressing dismay at those who “deny the qualitative security improvement (in Iraq) or dismiss its importance,” equating such a stance on behalf of “the anti-globalization and anti-imperialists” with “wishing for … the death of the largest number of Iraqis.”

The same visit was read quite differently by Lebanese daily al-Akhbar, a left-leaning secular publication that generally opposes US policies in the region. The paper’s Iraq correspondent, Zaid al-Zubaidi, said that Hariri’s visit was mainly for business purposes, with his “informal” high-level meetings devoted to delivering a political message from Saudi Arabia. On the political aspect: Sa`d Hariri – who holds Saudi citizenship - is occasionally sent on “missions” by high-level Saudi officials. According to many observers, including al-Akhbar, the visit may have included a Saudi message of “rapprochement” with the Maliki government.

On the business aspect, the paper cited skeptics who claimed that Saudi-Iraqi relations are decided on a “higher level” and that Hariri’s visit merely represented the commercial side of Saudi-Iraqi detente. These analysts point out that Hariri met with figures close to the Oil Ministry, that his visit to ‘Ammar al-Hakeem was labeled by Iraqi media as a “business meeting,” and that Talabani’s statements after meeting with Hariri focused on Iraq’s need to emulate the “success” of the “Hariri companies” in Lebanon’s post-war reconstruction. Furthermore, the paper revealed, a company owned by Hariri is currently bidding for a major Baghdad development (in terms of scale: the project – called al-Rasheed - is situated over 150 million Sq feet of land in the capital and – when completed – will include residential units for 400,000 people.) Lebanese commercial involvement in Iraq is not a small matter, a report in the Economy section of al-Akhbar said. Billions of dollars are currently invested by Lebanese businessmen (often managing, partnered with, or acting as fronts for Gulf capitals) in the high-risk environment of Iraq. And in the Middle East, where commerce often mixes with politics, the names of many members of the Lebanese and Iraqi elite are found in these investments.

For example, on the same day of Hariri’s visit, it was announced in Arbil that a Lebanese-financed $60 M hotel project will be constructed in Kurdistan’s capital. A ceremony was held for the announcement, attended by Kurdistan’s Prime Minister and the Lebanese ex-Minister of tourism, a political ally of Sa`d Hariri. During the ceremony, Kurdish officials announced that Lebanon is the second-largest investor in Kurdistan, with projects in the pipeline amounting to Billions of Dollars (including a $2.9 Bn oil refinery, cement factories and banking enterprises.)

A quick look at the names of investors and companies cited by the Iraqi sources reveals the extent of business interests joining a section of the Lebanese elite and post-2003 Iraqi leaders. In the days of Saddam, it was alleged that many Lebanese politicians (and their relatives) acted as business intermediaries for the Iraqi dictator – amassing large fortunes in the process. Political figures involved in these deals allegedly included MPs, Ministers and even the son of an ex-President. With a new regime for a “New Iraq,” new (?) patterns of political/commercial partnerships seem to be emerging between the two countries."

Monday, July 21, 2008

Let me make another prediction. Obama will be taken by Israeli occupation commanders on a helicopter tour of West Bank and Golan heights. Upon descending from the helicopter, he will make a statement to the effect that he did not know how small the terrain is, and how narrow Israel is. He will say a few words more about Israeli security needs. All U.S. senators, congress people, and presidential candidates go through this rituals. But they don't realize that when they make these statements they are saying basically this: I am not very bright, and I am really ignorant of geography. I never bothered to look at the map, and I am willing to utter whatever words dictated to me by my AIPAC-approved advisers. Oh, and I also am very insincere, and may criticize Israel after I celebrate my 80th birthday, like Jimmy Carter.

White Supremacists for Israel: "Betancourt also spoke out for other prisoners held throughout the world, including Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who is under house arrest in her native Myanmar, and Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier who was captured by Hamas-allied militants in 2006." So this new expert on foreign policy thinks that an Israeli occupation soldier is a prisoner, but the more than 10,000 Palestinian prisoners (including women, children, and elderly) are not? It says something about her race/ethnic standards, no?

I reviewed this book by Ajami when I was still a graduate student. Notice that Zionist fanatics still regularly quote that review. But I don't understand: I have written more negative things about him since. And notice the language used: so even words are equated with "physical assault." I mean, I know that Zionist fanatics are very protective of one of their own, but don't they need to update their propaganda files? "In a review of his book The Vanished Imam, Asad Abu Khalil verbally assaulted Ajami, calling him a "neo-orientalist," an insult in Middle East studies circles."

Comic by Terry Furry, reproduced from "Heard the One About the Funny Leftist?" by Cris Thompson, East Bay Express

As'ad's Bio

As'ad AbuKhalil, born March 16, 1960. From Tyre, Lebanon, grew up in Beirut. Received his BA and MA from American University of Beirut in pol sc. Came to US in 1983 and received his PhD in comparative government from Georgetown University. Taught at Tufts University, Georgetown University, George Washington University, Colorado College, and Randolph-Macon Woman's College. Served as a Scholar-in-Residence at Middle East Institute in Washington DC. He served as free-lance Middle East consultant for NBC News and ABC News, an experience that only served to increase his disdain for maintream US media. He is now professor of political science at California State University, Stanislaus. His favorite food is fried eggplants.

The comments that appear in the comments' section are unedited and uncensored. The thoughtful and thoughtless, sane and insane, loving and hateful, wise and unwise ideas that they contain do not represent the Angry Arab. They only represent those who write them, whoever they are.